C HAPTER 3 Systems Development and Documentation Techniques © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 1 of 136 INTRODUCTION • Questions to be addressed in this chapter include: – What is the purpose of documentation? – Why do accountants need to understand documentation? – What documentation techniques are used in accounting systems? – What are data flow diagrams and flowcharts? • How are they alike and different? • How are they prepared? © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 2 of 136 INTRODUCTION • Documentation includes the following types of tools: – Narratives (written descriptions) – Flowcharts – Diagrams – Other written material © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 3 of 136 INTRODUCTION • Documentation covers the who, what, when, where, why, and how of: – Data entry – Processing – Storage – Information output – System controls © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 4 of 136 INTRODUCTION • How do accountants use documentation? – At a minimum, they have to read documentation to understand how a system works. – They may need to evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of an entity’s internal controls. • Requires heavy reliance on documentation – They may peruse documentation to determine if a proposed system meets the needs of its users. – They may prepare documentation to: • Demonstrate how a proposed system would work • Demonstrate their understanding of a system of internal controls © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 5 of 136 INTRODUCTION • In this chapter, we discuss two of the most common documentation tools: – Data flow diagrams • Graphical descriptions of the sources and destinations of data. They show: – – – – © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Where data comes from How it flows The processes performed on it Where it goes Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 6 of 136 INTRODUCTION • In this chapter, we discuss two of the most common documentation tools: – Data flow diagrams – Flowcharts • Include three types: – Document flowcharts describe the flow of documents and information between departments or units. – System flowcharts describe the relationship between inputs, processing, and outputs for a system. – Program flowcharts describe the sequence of logical operations performed in a computer program. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 7 of 136 INTRODUCTION • Documentation techniques are necessary tools for accountants: – SAS-94 requires that auditors understand the automated and manual procedures an entity uses. • This understanding can be gleaned through documenting the internal control system—a process that effectively exposes strengths and weaknesses of the system. – SOX (2002) effectively requires that publicly-traded corporations and their auditors document and test the company’s internal controls. – Auditing Standard No. 2 promulgated by the PCAOB requires that the external auditor express an opinion on the client’s system of internal controls. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 8 of 136 INTRODUCTION • Documentation tools help accountants by: – Organizing very complicated systems into a form that can be more readily understood. – Helping new team members understand a pre-existing system. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 9 of 136 INTRODUCTION • Which method should you use—flowcharts or DVDs? – 62.5% of IS professionals use DFDs – 97.6% use flowcharts – Both can be prepared relatively simply using available software – Both are tested on professional exams – CONCLUSION: You need to know them both © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 10 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • A data flow diagram (DFD) graphically describes the flow of data within an organization. It is used to: – Document existing systems – Plan and design new systems • There is no black-and-white approach to developing a DFD. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 11 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • Example of a data flow diagram of the customer payment process from Figure 3-3 in your textbook. Customer Customer payment 1.0 Process Payment Accounts Receivable Remittance data 2.0 Update A/R Receivables Information Credit Manager Deposit Bank © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 12 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • A data flow diagram consists of four basic elements: – Data sources and destinations – Data flows – Transformation processes – Data stores © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 13 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • A data flow diagram consists of four basic elements: – Data sources and destinations – Data flows – Transformation processes – Data stores © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 14 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • Data sources and destinations – Appear as squares – Represent organizations or individuals that send or receive data used or produced by the system • An item can be both a source and a destination © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 15 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • Data sources and destinations are marked in red. • Can you tell which are sources and which are destinations? Customer Customer payment 1.0 Process Payment Accounts Receivable Remittance data 2.0 Update A/R Receivables Information Credit Manager Deposit Bank © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 16 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • A data flow diagram consists of four basic elements: – Data sources and destinations – Data flows – Transformation processes – Data stores © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 17 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • Data flows – Appear as arrows – Represent the flow of data between sources and destinations, processes, and data stores © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 18 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • Data flows are shown in red. • Does it appear that a data flow can be two-way? • If so, how is it handled? Customer Customer payment 1.0 Process Payment Remittance data Accounts Receivable 2.0 Update A/R Receivables Information Credit Manager Deposit Bank © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 19 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • Data flows should always be labeled. • The exception is a data flow moving into or out of a data store. • What symbol is the data store? Customer Customer payment 1.0 Process Payment Remittance data Accounts Receivable 2.0 Update A/R Receivables Information Credit Manager Deposit Bank © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 20 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • As you probably surmised from the previous slides, if a data flow is two-way, use a bidirectional arrow. Update Receivables General Ledger © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 21 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • If two data elements flow together, then the use of one data flow line is appropriate. Customer Cash Rec’d & Remittance Slip © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Process Payment Romney/Steinbart 22 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • If the data elements do not always flow together, then multiple lines will be needed. Customer Inquiry Customer © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Customer Payment Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Process Payment Romney/Steinbart 23 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • A data flow diagram consists of four basic elements: – Data sources and destinations – Data flows – Transformation processes – Data stores © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 24 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • Processes – Appear as circles – Represent the transformation of data © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 25 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • • • The transformation processes are shown in red. Every process must have at least one data inflow and at least one data outflow. Why? What do you notice about how the processes are labeled? Customer Customer payment 1.0 Process Payment Remittance data Accounts Receivable 2.0 Update A/R Receivables Information Credit Manager Deposit Bank © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 26 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • Data stores – Appear as two horizontal lines – Represent a temporary or permanent repository of data © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 27 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • The data store is shown in red. • Notice that the inflows and outflows to the data store are not labeled. Customer Customer payment 1.0 Process Payment Remittance data Accounts Receivable 2.0 Update A/R Receivables Information Credit Manager Deposit Bank © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 28 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • Data dictionary: – Data flows and data stores are typically collections of data elements. – EXAMPLE: A data flow labeled student information might contain elements such as student name, date of birth, ID number, address, phone number, and major. – The data dictionary contains a description of all data elements, data stores, and data flows in a system. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 29 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • Subdividing the DFD: – Few systems can be fully diagrammed on one sheet of paper, and users have needs for differing levels of detail. – Consequently, DFDs are subdivided into successively lower levels to provide increasing amounts of detail. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 30 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • The highest level of DFD is called a context diagram. – It provides a summary-level view of the system. – It depicts a data processing system and the external entities that are: • Sources of its input • Destinations of its output © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 31 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS Govt. Agencies Departments Payroll Processing System Employee checks Employees Bank Human Resources • This is the context diagram for the S&S payroll processing system (Figure 3-5 in your textbook). © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Management Romney/Steinbart 32 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS Govt. Agencies Departments Payroll Processing System Employee checks Employees Bank Human Resources • What information comes into this process, and from where? © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Management Romney/Steinbart 33 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS Govt. Agencies Departments Payroll Processing System Employee checks Employees Bank Human Resources • What information is produced by this process, and where does it go? © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Management Romney/Steinbart 34 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS Departments New employee form Human Resources This diagram shows the next level of detail for the context diagram in Figure 3-5. Time cards 1.0 Update Empl. Payroll File Employee change form 3.0 Prepare Reports 2.0 Pay Employees Employee/ Payroll File Management Payroll disbursement data Payroll check Bank 5.0 Update Gen. Ledger Payroll tax disb. voucher Payroll report © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Employees Employee paychecks 4.0 Pay Taxes General Ledger Tax report & payment Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Govt. Agencies Romney/Steinbart 35 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS Departments Human Resources New employee form What information comes into these processes and from where? Time cards 1.0 Update Empl. Payroll File Employee change form 3.0 Prepare Reports 2.0 Pay Employees Employee/ Payroll File Management Payroll disbursement data Payroll check Bank 5.0 Update Gen. Ledger Payroll tax disb. voucher Payroll report © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Employees Employee paychecks 4.0 Pay Taxes General Ledger Tax report & payment Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Govt. Agencies Romney/Steinbart 36 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS Departments New employee form Human Resources What information is produced by these processes, and where does it go? Time cards 1.0 Update Empl. Payroll File Employee change form 3.0 Prepare Reports 2.0 Pay Employees Employee/ Payroll File Management Payroll Disbursement data Payroll check Bank 5.0 Update Gen. Ledger Payroll tax disb. voucher Payroll report © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Employees Employee paychecks 4.0 Pay Taxes General Ledger Tax report & payment Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Govt. Agencies Romney/Steinbart 37 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS Departments Human Resources New employee form How do the sources and destinations differ from the context diagram? Time cards 1.0 Update Empl. Payroll file Employee Change form 3.0 Prepare reports 2.0 Pay Employees Employee/ Payroll file Management Payroll Disbursement data Payroll check Bank 5.0 Update Gen. Ledger Payroll tax disb. voucher Payroll report © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Employees Employee paychecks 4.0 Pay taxes General Ledger Tax report & payment Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Govt. Agencies Romney/Steinbart 38 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS Departments New employee form Human Resources Time cards 1.0 3.0 Notice that each process in the DFD is numbered sequentially. 2.0 Update Empl. Payroll file Employee Change form Employees Prepare reports Employee paychecks Pay Employees Employee/ Payroll file Payroll Disbursement data Payroll tax disb. voucher Payroll report Payroll check 5.0 Update Gen. Ledger General Ledger 4.0 Management © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Pay taxes Bank Tax report & payment Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Govt. Agencies Romney/Steinbart 39 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS Departments Human Resources New employee form Suppose we exploded Process 2.0 (Pay Employees) in the next level. The sub-processes would be numbered 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, etc. Time cards 1.0 Update Empl. Payroll File Employee change form 3.0 Prepare Reports 2.0 Pay Employees Employee/ Payroll File Management Payroll Disbursement data Payroll check Bank 5.0 Update Gen. Ledger Payroll tax disb. voucher Payroll report © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Employees Employee paychecks 4.0 Pay Taxes General Ledger Tax report & payment Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Govt. Agencies Romney/Steinbart 40 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • We’re going to go through a partial example of how the first level of detail was created. • But before we do, let’s step through some guidelines on how to create a DFD. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 41 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • RULE 1: Understand the system. Observe the flow of information and interview people involved to gain that understanding. • RULE 2: Ignore control processes and control actions (e.g., error corrections). Only very critical error paths should be included. • RULE 3: Determine the system boundaries— where it starts and stops. If you’re not sure about a process, include it for the time being. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 42 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • RULE 4: Draw the context diagram first, and then draw successively greater levels of detail. • RULE 5: Identify and label all data flows. The only ones that do not have to be labeled are those that go into or come out of data stores. • RULE 6: Data flows that always flow together should be grouped together. Those that do not flow together should be shown on separate lines. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 43 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • RULE 7: Show a process (circle) wherever a data flow is converted from one form to another. Likewise, every process should have at least one incoming data flow and at least one outgoing data flow. • RULE 8: Transformation processes that are logically related or occur simultaneously can be grouped in one bubble. • RULE 9: Number each process sequentially. A process labeled 5.0 would be exploded at the next level into processes numbered 5.1, 5.2, etc. A process labeled 5.2 would be exploded into 5.21, 5.22, etc. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 44 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • RULE 10: Process names should include action verbs, such as update, prepare, etc. • RULE 11: Identify and label all data stores, whether temporary or permanent. • RULE 12: Identify and label all sources and destinations. An entity can be both a source and destination. You may wish to include such items twice on the diagram, if needed, to avoid excessive or crossing lines. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 45 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • RULE 13: As much as possible, organize the flow from top to bottom and left to right. • RULE 14: You’re not likely to get it beautiful the first time, so plan to go through several iterations of refinements. • RULE 15: On the final copy, lines should not cross. On each page, include: – The name of the DFD – The date prepared – The preparer’s name © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 46 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • Now that we’ve been through the guidelines for developing DFDs, let’s go back to the chapter example and see if we can re-create a part of it. • You may wish to create a table with the following headings to organize your information: – Data Inputs – Processes – Data Outputs © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 47 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS Data Inputs © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Processes Data Outputs Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 48 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • The first paragraph of the narrative for the payroll process reads as follows: – When employees are hired, they complete a new employee form. When a change to an employee’s payroll status occurs, such as a raise or a change in the number of exemptions, human resources completes an employee change form. A copy of these forms is sent to payroll. These forms are used to create or update the records in the employee/payroll file and are then stored in the file. Employee records are stored alphabetically. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 49 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • The first paragraph of the narrative for the payroll process reads as follows: – When employees are hired, they complete a new employee form. When a change to an employee’s payroll status occurs, such as a raise or a change in the number of exemptions, human resources completes an employee change form. A copy of these forms is sent to payroll. These forms are used to create or update the records in the employee/payroll file and are then stored in the file. Employee records are stored alphabetically. The portion marked in red relates to activities that go on outside the boundaries of the payroll system. Consequently, these activities will not be included on the DFD. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 50 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • The first paragraph of the narrative for the payroll process reads as follows: – When employees are hired, they complete a new employee form. When a change to an employee’s payroll status occurs, such as a raise or a change in the number of exemptions, human resources completes an employee change form. A copy of these forms is sent to payroll. These forms are used to create or update the records in the employee/payroll file and are then stored in the file. Employee records are stored alphabetically. The portion marked in red suggests two data flows coming into the payroll process (new employee forms and employee change forms). The source of the inflows is the human resources department. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 51 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS Data Inputs Processes Data Outputs New employee forms and employee change forms (from H.R. Dept.) © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 52 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • The first paragraph of the narrative for the payroll process reads as follows: – When employees are hired, they complete a new employee form. When a change to an employee’s payroll status occurs, such as a raise or a change in the number of exemptions, human resources completes an employee change form. A copy of these forms is sent to payroll. These forms are used to create or update the records in the employee/payroll file and are then stored in the file. Employee records are stored alphabetically. The sentence marked in red suggests a process (update employee records) with the data outflow going to a data store (the employee/payroll file). © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 53 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS Data Inputs New employee forms and employee change forms (from H.R. Dept.) © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Processes Update records (read from file and record) Data Outputs Updated employee/ payroll file Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 54 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • The first paragraph of the narrative for the payroll process reads as follows: – When employees are hired, they complete a new employee form. When a change to an employee’s payroll status occurs, such as a raise or a change in the number of exemptions, human resources completes an employee change form. A copy of these forms is sent to payroll. These forms are used to create or update the records in the employee/payroll file and are then stored in the file. Employee records are stored alphabetically. The final sentence in this paragraph provides information about the physical storage of the data. Physical information is utilized in flowcharts but not in data flow diagrams. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 55 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS Data Inputs New employee forms and employee change forms (from H.R. Dept.) Processes Update records (read from file and record) Data Outputs Updated employee/ payroll file We will not do the entire DFD, however, you could finish this table by reading the remainder of the narrative in Table 3-1 in your textbook. The portion of the table completed so far allows us to draw the segment of the DFD that is highlighted on the following slide. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 56 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS Departments Human Resources New employee form Time cards 1.0 Update Empl. Payroll File Employee change form 3.0 Prepare Reports 2.0 Pay Employees Employee/ Payroll File Management Payroll disbursement data Payroll check Bank 5.0 Update Gen. Ledger Payroll tax disb. voucher Payroll report © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Employees Employee paychecks 4.0 Pay Taxes General Ledger Tax report & payment Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Govt. Agencies Romney/Steinbart 57 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • Keep the following in mind as you develop your DFD: – Remember to ignore control activities, such as error correction processes. – Some data inputs and outputs will not appear on the first level of the DFD but appear as the processes are exploded into greater levels of detail. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 58 of 136 DATA FLOW DIAGRAMS • The data flow diagram focuses on the logical flow of data. • Next, we will discuss flowcharts, which place greater emphasis on physical details. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 59 of 136 FLOWCHARTS • A flowchart is an analytical technique that describes some aspect of an information system in a clear, concise, and logical manner. • Flowcharts use a set of standard symbols to depict processing procedures and the flow of data. • Flowcharting History: – Introduced in 1950s by industrial engineers to document business processes and document flows for process improvement. – Sarbanes-Oxley 2002 increased importance by requiring companies to document business processes and internal controls procedures. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 60 of 136 FLOWCHARTS • Every shape on a flowchart depicts a unique operation, input, processing activity, or storage medium. • In the days of yore, flowcharts were manually created using plastic templates. • Most flowcharts are now drawn using a software program such as Visio. – Microsoft and Power Point are also used. – The software uses pre-drawn shapes, and the developer drags the shapes into the drawing. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 61 of 136 FLOWCHARTS • There are four types of flowcharting symbols: – Input/output symbols Input/output symbols indicate the type of device or media that provides input to or records output from a process. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 62 of 136 FLOWCHARTS • There are four types of flowcharting symbols: – Input/output symbols – Processing symbols Processing symbols indicate the type of device used to process the data or whether the data is processed manually. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 63 of 136 FLOWCHARTS • There are four types of flowcharting symbols: – Input/output symbols – Processing symbols – Storage symbols Storage symbols indicate the type of device used to store data while the system is not using it. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 64 of 136 FLOWCHARTS • There are four types of flowcharting symbols: • Flow and miscellaneous symbols may indicate: – Input/output –symbols The flow of data and goods – The beginning or end of the flowchart – Processing symbols – The location of a decision – Storage symbols – An explanatory note – Flow and miscellaneous symbols © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 65 of 136 FLOWCHARTS • Click on buttons below if you wish to review symbols in the various categories. Input/Output Symbols Storage Symbols © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Processing Symbols Flow & Misc. Symbols Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 66 of 136 DOCUMENT FLOWCHARTS • A document flowchart shows the flow of documents and information among areas of responsibility in an organization. • These flowcharts trace a document from cradle to grave and show: – – – – – Where a document comes from Where it’s distributed How it’s used It’s ultimate disposition Everything that happens as it flows through the system © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 89 of 136 DOCUMENT FLOWCHARTS • Internal control flowcharts are document flowcharts used to evaluate the adequacy of internal controls, such as segregation of duties or internal checks. • They can reveal weaknesses or inefficiencies such as: – Inadequate communication flows – Unnecessarily complex document flows – Procedures that cause wasteful delays • Document flowcharts are also prepared in the system design process. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 90 of 136 This is part of the document flowchart from Figure 3-9 in your textbook. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 91 of 136 GUIDELINES FOR PREPARING FLOWCHARTS • Let’s step through some guidelines for preparing flowcharts: – As with DFDs, you can’t effectively prepare a flowchart if you don’t understand the system, so: • Interview users, developers, auditors, and management • Administer questionnaires • Read through narratives • Walk through systems transactions © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 92 of 136 GUIDELINES FOR PREPARING FLOWCHARTS – Identify: • Entities to be flowcharted, e.g., departments, functions, external parties (the parties who “do” things in the story) • Documents or information flows • Processes – As you read through a narrative, you may want to mark the preceding items with different shapes (e.g., drawing a rectangle around entities, circling documents, etc.). © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 93 of 136 GUIDELINES FOR PREPARING FLOWCHARTS – Use separate columns for the activity of each entity. • Example: If there are three different departments or functions that “do” things in the narrative, there would be three columns on the flowchart. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 94 of 136 What are the entities in this flowchart? © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 95 of 136 GUIDELINES FOR PREPARING FLOWCHARTS – Flowchart the normal course of operations, and identify exceptions with annotations. – As much as possible, the flow should go from top to bottom and left to right. – Use standard flowcharting symbols, and draw with a template or computer. – Clearly label all symbols. Use annotations if necessary to provide adequate explanation. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 96 of 136 GUIDELINES FOR PREPARING FLOWCHARTS – Give the flowchart a clear beginning and ending. • Show where each document originated and its final disposition. – One approach you can use is to read through the narrative and for each step define: • What was (were) the input(s) • What process was carried out • What was (were) the output(s) – Note on the next slide that the flow sequence is input—process—output. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 97 of 136 Identifies where input is coming from © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 98 of 136 Inputs © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 99 of 136 Process © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 100 of 136 Output to storage © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 101 of 136 Input for next process © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 102 of 136 Process © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 103 of 136 Output © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 104 of 136 GUIDELINES FOR PREPARING FLOWCHARTS – Every manual process should have at least one input and at least one output. – Show all data entered into or retrieved from a computer file as passing through a process first. – Do not show process symbols for: • Forwarding a document to another entity • Filing a document © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 105 of 136 Forwarding a document © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 106 of 136 Filing a document © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 107 of 136 GUIDELINES FOR PREPARING FLOWCHARTS – Do not connect two documents except when forwarding to another column. • When a document is forwarded, show it in both locations. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 108 of 136 Show forwarded document in both locations © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 109 of 136 GUIDELINES FOR PREPARING FLOWCHARTS – When using multiple copies of a document, place document numbers in the upper, right-hand corner. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 110 of 136 What happens to the document numbers as the documents move to other locations? © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 111 of 136 GUIDELINES FOR PREPARING FLOWCHARTS – Show on-page connectors and label them clearly to avoid excess flow lines. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 112 of 136 © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 113 of 136 GUIDELINES FOR PREPARING FLOWCHARTS – Use off-page connectors if the flow goes to another page. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 114 of 136 Are there other offpage connectors on this flowchart? © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 115 of 136 GUIDELINES FOR PREPARING FLOWCHARTS – If a flowchart takes more than one page, label the pages as 1 of 5, 2 of 5, 3 of 5, etc. – Show documents or reports first in the column where they are created. – Start with a rough draft; then redesign to avoid clutter and crossed lines. – Verify the accuracy of your flowchart by reviewing it with users, etc. – Place the flowchart name, the date, and the preparer’s name on each page of the final copy. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 116 of 136 SYSTEM FLOWCHARTS • Now that we’ve looked at document flowcharts and guidelines for creating flowcharts, let’s take a brief look at system flowcharts. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 117 of 136 SYSTEM FLOWCHARTS • A system flowchart depicts the relationship among the inputs, processes, and outputs of an AIS. – The system flowchart begins by identifying the inputs to the system. • These inputs can be: – New data – Data stored for future use – Both © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 118 of 136 SYSTEM FLOWCHARTS • A system flowchart depicts the relationship among the inputs, processes, and outputs of an AIS. – The system flowchart begins by identifying the inputs to the system. – Each input is followed by a process, i.e., the steps performed on the data. • If the process is performed by a computer, the logic of the computer program would be depicted in a program flowchart. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 119 of 136 SYSTEM FLOWCHARTS • A system flowchart depicts the relationship among the inputs, processes, and outputs of an AIS. • The output may be: – The system flowchart –begins by identifying the Stored for later use inputs to the system. – Displayed on a screen Printed on paper i.e., the – Each input is followed– by a process, – An input to the next process steps performed on the data. – The process is followed by outputs—the resulting new information. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 120 of 136 SYSTEM FLOWCHARTS • A system flowchart depicts the relationship among the inputs, processes, and outputs of an AIS. – The system flowchart begins by identifying the inputs to the system. – Each input is followed by a process, i.e., the steps performed on the data. – The process is followed by outputs—the resulting new information. – In other words, it’s the same basic input— process—output pattern that we saw in the document flowchart. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 121 of 136 • System Flowchart Shown in Figure 3-11 in your textbook • Can you spot the input— process—output pattern? © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 122 of 136 PROGRAM FLOWCHARTS • Program flowcharts illustrate the sequence of logical operations performed by a computer in executing a program. • They also follow an input—process— output pattern. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 123 of 136 • The program flowchart from Figure 3-11 in your textbook is shown on the right. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 124 of 136 • Note that the program flowchart details the logic of processes performed by the computer. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 125 of 136 • This flowchart becomes the programmer’s blueprint for writing the actual computer program. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 126 of 136 FLOWCHARTS VS. DFDs • Now that we’ve examined both flowcharts and DFDs, it may be useful to discuss the differences again. • DFDs place a heavy emphasis on the logical aspects of a system. • Flowcharts place more emphasis on the physical characteristics of the system. • An example may be useful. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 127 of 136 FLOWCHARTS VS. DFDs • EXAMPLE: The registrar’s office of a small college receives paper enrollment forms from students. They sort these records alphabetically and then update the student record file to show the new classes.They also prepare class lists from the same data. The sorted enrollment forms are forwarded to the bursar’s office for billing purposes. Class lists are mailed to faculty members. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 128 of 136 Students Enrollment Forms Here’s a DFD that goes with the story. 1.0 Update Student Records Student Records Enrollment Forms 2.0 Prepare Class Lists Bursar Enrollment Forms Class Lists Faculty © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 129 of 136 Registrar’s Office Students Students Enrollment Forms Sort Forms Update Student Records Sorted Enrollment Forms Sorted Enrollment Forms Prepare Class Lists Enrollment Forms A 1.0 Update Student Records Student Records Enrollment Forms 2.0 Prepare Class Lists Bursar Enrollment Forms Class Lists Here’s a flowchart that goes with the story Class Lists Sorted Enrollment Forms Faculty Faculty © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart Bursar 130 of 136 FLOWCHARTS VS. DFDs • Now let’s change the story so that students enter enrollment data online. The registrar’s office sends a tape file of the enrollment data to the bursar’s office and continues to send paper class lists to faculty. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 131 of 136 Original DFD Students Students Enrollment Forms 1.0 Update Student Records Enrollment Data Student Records 1.0 Update Student Records Enrollment Forms 2.0 Prepare Class Lists 2.0 Prepare Class Lists Class Lists Faculty © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Student Records Enrollment Data Bursar Enrollment Forms Here’s the revised DFD. How has it changed? Bursar Enrollment Data Class Lists Faculty Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 132 of 136 Registrar’s Office Student s A Registrar’s Office Enrollment Forms Sort Forms Students Enrollment Data Update Student Records Sorted Enrollment Forms Enrollment Data Update Student Records Sorted Enrollment Forms Prepare Class Lists Class Lists Sorted Enrollment Forms Faculty Bursar Student Records Here’s the revised flowchart. How has it changed? Class Lists Bursar Faculty Original Flowchart © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Prepare Class Lists Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 133 of 136 FLOWCHARTS VS. DFDs • Moral of the story: Changes in the physical characteristics of the process do affect the flowchart but have little or no impact on the DFD. • The DFD focuses more on the logic. • When deciding which tool to employ, consider the information needs of those who will view it. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 134 of 136 QUIZ QUESTION • How is playing the piano like making DFDs and flowcharts? – You can’t learn to do it by just watching someone else. – You can’t learn to do it by just looking at examples. – Your first attempts are clumsy. – Practice leads to improvement and maybe even perfection. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 135 of 136 SUMMARY • We’ve learned about graphical forms of documentation, particularly: – Data flow diagrams – Flowcharts • We’ve learned why these tools are important to accountants and how they are employed. • We’ve learned basic guidelines for creating data flow diagrams and flowcharts. © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Accounting Information Systems, 11/e Romney/Steinbart 136 of 136